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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> The Leicester Bakery (Holdings) Ltd v Ridge And Partners LLP (Rev 1) [2020] EWHC 2430 (TCC) (11 September 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2020/2430.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2430 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE LEICESTER BAKERY (HOLDINGS) LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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RIDGE AND PARTNERS LLP |
Defendant |
____________________
Christopher Reid (instructed by Mayer Brown International LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 24 August 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE JEFFORD:
Introduction
The approach to the applications
The factual and procedural background
"13.1 Unless otherwise set out in the Offer Letter, all intellectual property rights, including without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, copyrights, patents, know how and any other intellectual property rights howsoever arising in all documents and drawings shall remain the property of Ridge.
13.2 Ridge grants a non-exclusive, royalty free licence to the Client to use or reproduce drawings, documents or data produced by Ridge in connection with the Services for all reasonable purposes in connection with the Project and/or Services.
….
13.5 Ridge shall provide copies of any drawings, documents or data required by the Client pursuant to clause 13.2 and shall be entitled to its reasonable copying and administrative costs of providing such copies."
(i) "RECITALS
A. The Bakery has agreed to provide information to the Recipient concerning the project known as The Leicester Bakery New Premises, Highview Close (Land Adjacent), Leicester, in order for the Recipient to perform the project management, cost management, Employer's Agent, and mechanical and electrical consultancy services ("the Purpose").
B. The Bakery will disclose or make available Confidential Information (defined below) to the Recipient and the Bakery requires the Recipient to keep such information strictly confidential on the terms of this Agreement."
(ii) Clause 1 then defined "Confidential Information" of the Bakery. In summary, this was information as to the Bakery's business and financial affairs and information relating to its operations including trade secrets and know how.
(iii) Clause 2.6:
"The Recipient shall upon the request of the Bakery at any time and within 10 working days of such request, return or destroy (at the Bakery's option) all Confidential Information of the Bakery and all documents, notes, memoranda, papers, records, disks and any other material relating thereto or which bears or incorporated any of that Confidential Information or any information derived from it ….."
(iv) Clause 10:
"The provisions of this Agreement shall continue to apply notwithstanding that the Bakery may or may not engage the recipient for the Purpose and notwithstanding the completion of the services or the termination of the Recipient's engagement at any time."
"With regards to your generic request for Project Documentation, Leicester Bakery have been issued all documentation produced by Ridge in the course of the project delivery so will be able to provide this information directly to the new Employer's Agent. We would also confirm that the termination of our agreement includes the termination of all Clients rights under the agreement."
"LB has a more pressing issue in requiring access to documentation. Mr Sandell alleged in an email of 19 March that all information had been handed over, patently that is not the case."
The letter then referred to clause 13.2 of Ridge's standard terms which was described as a wide ranging clause. The letter continued
"This is important as an Adjudicator's decision issued on 29 December 2018 found as a fact that Ridge had entered into agreements with the contractor, G F Tomlinson & Sons Limited, to accept alterations to main staircase to the Bakery. That Decision has been provided to Mr Sandell and comments requested both during the adjudication and subsequently; Mr Sandell refused to assist or provide any comments.
Nonetheless, this is clear evidence that agreements have been made without LB's knowledge or consent that both it and any subsequent Employer's Agent needs to be aware of.
In order to effectively manage the project and provide an orderly hand-over to the replacement Employer's Agent, access needs to be given to these documents immediately. LB has written to you requesting access but has been told that the above licence has been revoked upon termination which is patently not the case and additional of over £200,000 will be charged. It is quite clear that Mr Sandell is trying to be as obstructive as possible.
As LB is also the subject matter of a live adjudication on time issues immediate access is required and indeed the balance of convenience is clearly in favour of providing full access …..
In the circumstances where the documents are required as a matter of urgency we would invite you to make proposals for the immediate of all documentation to which LB's licence under clause 13.2 applies. If we do not receive these proposals within 24 hours we are instructed to apply to Court for an ex parte injunction compelling you to release those documents by order of the Court."
"Your assertion that Leicester Bakery do not have all documentation on the project is incorrect. The documentation referred to in the adjudication notice are emails sent to Leicester Bakery and minutes of meetings at which Leicester Bakery attended. In addition, as directly instructed by Leicester Bakery, their Client Representative was acting on their behalf and was party to the correspondence and documentation referred to in the Adjudication."
"It is apparent from the adjudication that took place in December 2018 relating to the staircase that drawings were not sent on to LB and that discussions were entered into and agreements made to which LB was not privy. Accordingly, drawings, reports, site visits and surveys need to be disclosed to ensure LB has everything because LB is constantly being surprised in adjudication proceedings and needs full disclosure to cover the gaps that are clearly present."
Gateley then set out a list of categories of "disclosure" which, in summary, covered all the documentation that might be expected to be generated in the course of a project such as this. Gateley repeated that the documentation was required as a matter of urgency and said that if they did not receive proposals from Ridge to provide the documents by 10.00am on Monday 25 March 2020, they would apply ex parte for an injunction.
"This clause is drafted very widely and covers all documents, drawings and other media associated with the Works. …
This is a collateral contractual obligation to provide disclosure of all documentation and as it has not been provided will be presented to the Court as further evidence of your unreasonable behaviour in breach of two separate contracts."
"We again reiterate our request that you provide us with all the documents we required. We confirm that we will pay the reasonable costs of you providing those documents."
The Particulars of Claim
"Following the making of the Demand [20 March 2019], the Defendant did deliver-up certain documents and stated to the Claimant that it had delivered up all such documents. However, the Claimant has subsequently discovered in the course of a dispute with a sub-contractor that certain documents had not been delivered up but had, wrongfully and in breach of contract and/or breach of fiduciary duty been provided to the sub-contractor to assist the sub-contractor in its claim against the Claimant."
"The Claimant is currently unable to plead as to what (if any) losses have been suffered as a consequence of the Defendant's breach of contract and/or breach of fiduciary duty and/or breach of bailment and/or conversion but reserves the right to plead further as to such losses following delivery-up of the Documents and/or disclosure in this action."
The injunction
"28. The prejudice of the Defendant's refusal to comply with its obligation to deliver up documents and information as required by the Services Agreement and the Agreement has already been suffered by the Claimant in the first adjudication with the Contractor by virtue of the Claimant being bound by agreement with the Contractor which had been agreed by the Defendant. The Claimant conducted the adjudication without the relevant documents and in consequence sought to defend claims in circumstances where it would have compromised those claims if it had been aware of the existence of the documents that were provided by the Defendant to the Claimant.
29. As a consequence, the Claimant has incurred: (1) its own costs; and (2) costs that it will pay to its contractor that were caused by the Defendant's breach of contract and/or fiduciary duty. Further, the Claimant lost the chance to settle the dispute on more favourable terms by being deprived of the documents that would have allowed it to take proper advice as to its legal position."
Further pleadings
"30. Paragraph 10.2 is noted. The dispute with GFT is irrelevant to the Claimant's claim herein save that: (1) in the course of the said dispute it became apparent that the Defendant had not disclosed all of the "project documentation produced by Ridge" as stated by Mr Sandell; and (2) that the Claimant's ability to conduct its case in that dispute was prejudiced by the Defendant's failure to provide the Documents and/or certain individual documents that were relied on by GFT and of which the Claimant had no prior knowledge."
The progress of the proceedings
"The defendant looks forward to receiving the claimant's Initial Disclosure List of Documents and copies of the documents listed therein by the close of business today, including but not limited to any submissions and decision the adjudications between the claimant and its Contractor, GF Tomlinson & Sons."
In his second statement, Mr Morris says that he received no reply to that letter and no documents. That is not disputed.
"At no time was the Listing Office informed that the parties had agreed to vacate the CMC.
We had contacted the Court to express our view that a final hearing for the injunction would be a more appropriate listing than a CMC in this matter. This was to be investigated and it was agreed with the Court that if any changes to the listing occurred, we would inform you.
We heard nothing further from the Court in this respect so it was assumed the CMC would be going ahead prior to the Court listing a final hearing.
….
We remain of the view that a final hearing is the appropriate listing to deal with this matter effectively. A CMC is not necessary and has only arisen because the proceedings have been transferred, at your request.
In any event, the CMC has now been vacated. It would be both beneficial and cost effective for the parties to co-operate in obtaining a listing from the Court for a final hearing to bring this matter to a close."
"This was an application for an injunction to be made final at a subsequent hearing after the interim injunction was granted in our client's favour and in respect of which your client has partially complied. The question is whether the injunction is made final or not; that's it."
The summary judgment application
The application for permission to amend
(i) Paragraphs 15A to 15C set out that there were delays in the course of the works and that the Contractor sought extensions of time to the dates for Sectional Completion. In support of its application, the Contractor submitted, on or about 11 December 2018, "a critical path report" prepared by Mr Iain Stackhouse. It is said that it was obvious to Mr Stackhouse that any extension of time would deprive the Claimant of the right to claim liquidated damages and would expose the claimant to the risk of having to make payments in respect of extended preliminaries.
(ii) Paragraph 15D pleads that on 15 March 2019, the Contractor commenced an adjudication dealing with delay and extensions of time to the Sectional Completion dates. Paragraph 15E then says that, as a result of the notification of that adjudication, the Claimant wrote to the Defendant "pointing out that the contractor had commenced an adjudication and demanding disclosure of the Documents. The Claimant stated expressly that the Documents were required to deal with the adjudication …."
(iii) The following paragraphs (15F to 16L) set out the correspondence that followed and the commencement of these proceedings.
(iv) Paragraph 16M alleges that disclosure was given, pursuant to the consent order, on or about 7 May and that that disclosure was "extensive and incomplete".
(v) Paragraph 16N is then in these terms:
"As a consequence of the failure to disclose documents properly or at all and in a timely fashion in response to the demands made by the Defendant, the Claimant was unable to prepare its evidence to respond to the claims made by the contractor in the March 2019 Adjudication."
(vi) Paragraph 16O then pleads that as a consequence of the absence of such evidence, the adjudicator gave the extensions of time that he did.
(vii) From paragraph 16Q, the Claimant pleads its case as to loss and damage. The content of paragraphs 16O and 16Q is repeated. It is then said that as a consequence of the extensions of time, the Claimant lost the right to claim liquidated damages of £387,000 in relation to the Main Unit and £292,600 in relation to the Retail Units – a total of £679,600. Further, it is said that the Contractor has submitted a further claim for £500,000 in relation to extended preliminaries "that would not have been necessary but for the Defendant's unlawful acts".
(viii) At paragraph 16V, the Claimant claims damages or equitable compensation in a sum of not less than £1,170,600 (which is the total of the sums above).
(ix) At paragraph 16W, the Claimant pleads further or in the alternative, a claim for damages or equitable compensation "for the loss of the chance to succeed in the March 2019 adjudication …." (my emphasis).
(x) Paragraph 16X the provides:
"The Claimant is currently engaged in an arbitration with the contractor in an attempt to reduce its losses as more particularly set out above. The Claimant will plead further when the result of the arbitration is known."
The merits of the amended claim
Other factors
"(a) … An amendment is late if it could have been advanced earlier, or involves the duplication of cost and effort, or if it requires the resisting party to revisit any of the significant steps in the litigation (such as disclosure or the provision of witness statement and expert's reports) which had been completed at the time of the amendment.
…
(c) The history of the amendment, together with an explanation for its lateness, is a matter for the amending party and is an important factor in the necessary balancing exercise. … In essence there must be a good reason for the delay."
(i) In this case, the proceedings have not advanced very far but it is still the case that steps have been taken by Ridge in respect of case management, costs budgeting and disclosure which will have to be revisited.
(ii) If the stage of the proceedings was the only factor going to lateness and was to be looked at in isolation, I would not have regarded this application as late. But that would, in my judgment, be an unrealistic approach.
(iii) The lateness of this amendment comes from the fact, as I have already said, that it is made over a year after the start of proceedings and over a year after the adjudicator's decision. At no time until early July was any indication given that there was any intention to make this amendment and the Claimant's position had been the complete opposite.
(iv) The argument that the Claimant has been awaiting the outcome of the arbitration does not explain or excuse the Claimant's position. If that were truly the Claimant's position, it would have been the easiest thing to say in correspondence. Instead, there has been, in the pleadings and correspondence since the 1 May Order was made, confirmation that the damages claim related to the staircase adjudication; utter silence about any other adjudication or arbitration; the repeated assertion that the matter should proceed directly to a "final hearing" to make the injunction final; and the filing of a costs budget and draft directions that are completely inconsistent with a case of the complexity that a damages claim of this nature would entail.
The summary judgment application revisited